A revelatory, jaw-dropping portrait of Tucker Carlson’s career and a Zelig-like story of from insider to populist, from respectability to insanity, the story of how the right-wing media lost its mind.New York Magazine writer Jason Zengerle's eye-opening narrative follows Tucker Carlson's infamous journey from gifted young intern at New Republic to the noxious talking head we've all witnessed on Fox News. In the tradition of Our Man and The Loudest Voice in the Room, Zengerle examines how Tucker Carlson's Zelig-like career offers a unique lens into the confusing, myopic, and utterly shameless evolution of American conservatism, its media presence and punditry, from the 1990s to the present.
Really insightful and entertaining! I learned a lot reading this. Wish it had gone more into what Tucker is up to since being fired from Fox, and sometimes events were written about a little out of order which I didn’t love but it didn’t happen too often.
This was fine. It was well written enough to be a breezy read, but it was a little too much like a Wikipedia entry. Did I learn a few facts I didn’t know before? Sure. Do I have any idea why it seems like a switch flipped and Tucker sold his soul after previously maintaining a pretty independent reputation? Not at all.
I do not respect Tucker Carlson as a “journalist” and this book cemented that. Chronicled his willingness to abandon all his morals in pursuit of power, the rise of conservative media, and ultimately the MAGA movement. Was very interesting (and depressing) to get a lot more of the media context of how we got here.
It's a shame the author capitulates and writes at the beginning that there's no good answer to how Carlson transformed from journalist to Trump propagandist. I don't agree with the character's views, but I had a great time reading.
Over the years, many have asked, Who is Tucker Carlson? Few have ever asked, Why is Tucker Carlson? Jason Zengerle asks, and answers, that question, and more, in this deep dive into Tucker’s career and the ways it has been shaped by (and now shapes) conservative media writ large.
Zengerle’s background as a journalist is on full display as he applies an investigative lens to track the transformation of conservative media’s “Eldest Boy” from a snarky magazine fact-finder into the internet’s enfant terrible, whose voice impacts domestic and foreign policy in ways both overt and subtle, proving once and for all that the pen (or mic) is mightier than the sword. You can use a sword to cash the checks, but first you need the pen to write them.
Very good book that explains the rise and shapeshifting of Tucker Carlson, who emerged as one of the most important media figures on the right in the 2010s and 2020s. Carlson simultaneously was a chameleon who sought opportunities, wealth, and platforms in a variety of media outlets (CNN, the Weekly Standard, MSNBC, the Daily Caller, Fox, and finally podcasting), and you can trace the changes to these media through his rise, fall, and rise. But he is both an ideologue and an opportunist, and he always had a hard right element that dissented significantly from the more moderate version of conservatism that controlled the GOP in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. He kept quiet about his reservations on the Iraq War and immigration reform in the 2000s, for example, because his job was to play a mainstream Republican on TV.
When exactly did Tucker Carlson become crazy? One thing this book gets across is that he actually did some decent journalism and wasn't a total hack for his entire career. But the media ecosystem fed his worst tendencies, especially as it fragmented and it became more financially sustainable to narrowcast at certain audiences. He embraced a persona that was probably to the right of Trump and which emphasized, above all, that an elite "they" controlled every thing and was out to get you and destroy your culture (this being targeted at a mostly white male audience). He became an apologist for authoritarian regimes and for even worse right-wing extremists and a propagandist for conspiracies like birtherism and January 6 trutherism. At a certain point, marinating in your own propaganda for years makes you believe it, especially if you were already predisposed to extreme views and paranoia, and it seems like that's what happened to Carlson.
And yet, I still think there is something to the idea that he knows better. He formed the Daily Caller with the original intention to do actual news, although this fell apart quickly. He has repeatedly texted his disdain for Trump, including on January 6 and regarding the pandemic, and has even called him evil and demonic. ANd yet, it was too juicy to resist becoming Trump's favorite pundit and an inside player in the highest reaches of government, and Carlson frankly doesn't have the integrity to resist the crazy. He'll go down in history as one of hundreds of conservatives who will acknowledge Trump's destructiveness in group chats and then support and grift off of him in public. In a different environment with different incentives, I think you could see Carlson being a much more staid figure. But none of this, of course, justifies or excuses his descent into utter madness.
Anyways, this book is fairly short and very well done, and it's a compelling look not only at Carlson but the larger media landscape over the past 30 years.
The right in America is a pack of lunatics. They've built a cult of personality around a dim-witted, racist crook. I live in a red state and I get how a lot of regular people ended up here. Their standard of living has declined, they see people like them being looked down on by the cultural elites on the coasts. On top of that they've been poorly educated by underfunded schools and they're lied to on a daily basis by Fox News.
What's worse than those people are those at the top of the right wing pyramid playing those regular people. Take for example, one of my senators, Tom Cotton. Cotton is no dummy. A Harvard undergrad and Harvard Law grad, a graduate of Army Officer School and a former McKinsey consultant. Cotton cynically plays the rubes back home to pass tax cuts for his rich donors and block protections for his most vulnerable consitituents. Tucker Carlson certainly fits in this category. He's not a stupid person and that makes what comes out of his mouth much worse.
"Hated by All the Right People" is a catalog of Tucker Carlson's descent from a writer for mainstream conservative magazines to a tv talking head pushin racism, conspiracies and outright lies. The book is well researched with numerous dilligently researched annecdotes about feuds and fallings out within the conservative world, however it's totally lacking in explanation. Why did Tucker Carlson, among numerous other prominent conservatives go from right of center respectable politics to embracing fascism and racism?
The most insane (political) biography spanning over Tucker Carlson’s career as a journalist to whatever he considers himself today. Zengerle describes the jaw dropping influence Carlson held over Donald Trump and the current administration. Carlson was deeply involved in cabinet appointees and Carlson knew how to subliminally influence Trumps foreign and domestic policies. Carlson, who has no elected office or official title, ended up having a shocking amount of power.
What is equally shocking is Carlson has reversed positions so frequently and conveniently that it becomes impossible to take any of his beliefs at face value. He has flipped on nearly every major issue over the course of his career from his views on Trump, COVID and foreign policy. His opinion on Donald Trump continued to vary until he realized the President tuned into his show every night which allowed Tucker to pitch his stories to the audience of one (Donald Trump.) Zengerle notes that Tucker’s previous colleagues recognized him as a seriously gifted writer who was always outspoken but enjoyed debating with his liberal friends but also calling out conservative failures. By the end of the book, many of Carlson’s friends had cut ties.
Zengerle writes in a non-biased point of view and lets Carlson’s career moves speak for themselves. Carlson is a stereotypical grifter and his desire for fame, fortune and power has him “descending into madness but he is still speaking to millions.”
I was motivated to read this by my memories of Tucker Carlson as the Beatle-mopped, bowtie-wearing cutie who debated Paul Begala in Crossfire days. I didn't agree with his politics but I liked his quick wit and contrarian perspective which didn't fit into a neat box. So for me, as for others, the question was, What happened to Carlson? And I'm afraid this book didn't really answer the question. The inference is that the times, with its far far right demands, is the culprit. Tucker took many a fall trying to do it the honest way, and now that he has succumbed to kookiness is receiving only plaudits, so there is that. But his history shows a contrarian spirit that enjoys sending it up and fighting the conventional playbook, and there may be some of that in his evolution. There is certainly no question but what he is super smart and can debate you up one side of the hill and down another. I guess I felt I understood him to a certain degree until his last evolution, when Jason Zengerly seemed to lose the thread of his transformation and was reduced to simply trotting out a series of stories without any insight. What makes Tucker run, money, fame, conviction or perversity? I still don't know.
This book had a ripped-from-the-headlines quality that made it informative but not illuminating. We get the many stages of Carlson's career--intern at the Heritage Foundation, staff writer at The Weekly Standard, TV personality at CNN and MSNBC, anti-anti-Trumper extraordinaire at Fox, and finally, the id of Dark MAGA--but we never really get inside his head. Also, Zengerle has a sympathy for Carlson--rooted in his admiration of Carlson's magazine journalism from the late-1990s--that kind of rubbed me the wrong way. I'm skeptical that Carlson was ever the ideologically complicated and independent-minded thinker that Zengerle makes him out to be at the beginning.
Notes
Bill Kristol founds The Weekly Standard in 1995 - Kristol took as his inspiration The New Republic
Carlson started his career in Washington as a fact checker at Policy Review, a publication of the Heritage Foundation
Paul Weyrich supported FAIR
David Brooks, also at The Weekly Standard, argued for "greatness conservatism": compulsory national service, a mission to Mars (44)
I appreciated this book as a tour of a very successful (surprisingly successful) media career. Hated by All the Right People shows how Tucker Carlson maneuvers, jumps and finagles his way to success, and his story is the story of political media at the end of the 20th century and beginning of the 21st.
But the book also sets itself up as a morality tale, promising to offer an explanation of what happened, and how Carlson became this Carlson. Did he always believe the things he now believes? Was he unmoored by ambition? Did resentments get the better of him?
We don't get an answer. We don't get a theory. The book apparently doesn't know? Which makes reading a bit of a frustrating experience ...
i’m quitting this book after 76 pages. zengerle writes like a complete ass, abusing the thesaurus in ways typically reserved to be seen only by sophomore english teachers as they parse a report written by their laziest student. nothing can be straight forward and zengerle consistently uses uninviting and niche terms when there’s nothing wrong with the alternative. the first example is in the prologue where he alludes to trump’s solipsism instead of just calling him self-centered or self-assured. after 76 pages, i don’t know who anyone is because they are all described in the most pigeonholed way. it’s not like hea using the words keen or astute instead of smart. no, he would say perspicacious because zengerle is a douchebag. thanks for nothing
This book helped me understand someone whose patterns of thought and belief had so long confounded me. Jason Zengerle offered a masterful look at the development of Tucker Carlson and how he wound up where he is today.
I was personally most surprised to find Tucker's tenure at the Weekly Standard being one of the most fascinating eras to me.
The only thing that I would have liked would maybe a bit of a slower final section on the last four or so years of Tucker's trajectory instead of them being glossed over so quickly in a single chapter. If anything, I would have loved this book to have been an extra hundred pages or so.
really really good narrative portrait of a guy who drove himself and everyone else crazy. notably, he was subject to the same push and pull that everyone feels under a profit-driven political economy and in a lot of ways he was an observer of his own decline - this isn't to say he isn't responsible, just that he had a more passive role in his arc than I would've thought. I heard in an interview that the author of this book did not think that tucker would run for president, I hope that's true but I'm not so sure: I think he's the only person on the right with the charisma pull off the successor role in the trump cult of personality, and unfortunately he's a whole lot smarter.
Honestly, very insightful read about Tucker’s rise to power starting with traditional written media and a desire to be a traditional journalist, his bipartisan friendships, eventually moving to his own business and then really impacting Trump and his White House both by NOT communicating with him directly and eventually, being close to him. This book highlights connections from years ago that current members of the administration had to one another. I read this book in hopes of better understanding what has occurred in this sector of politics and media and I do feel I was given info I didn’t know.
This book reads like a Ben Mezrich movie/(book)-- a fast paced, deeply researched exploration of the evolution of Tucker Carlson and right-wing media in general. As someone who has long despised Tucker Carlson, FOX News, Brietbart, etc and everything they represent from afar, I appreciated learning about the ecosystem of political journalism and how it has been transformed by the proliferation of "channels" of information (internet at the top of the list) and how one person so radically remade himself into pariah and folk hero all at once. I learned a ton!
This is not a book written for the ages. They drop names and just assume you know who the person is. ( Example: I asked three people in their twenties who Katie Couric is and none of them knew. She is in the book without attribution.)
No one knows why Tucker was fired, and neither does the author. If you are looking for insight, this isn’t your book.
It’s a mediocre book about a mediocre guy. They deserve each other. The problem is that he is a real possible Presidential candidate 2028. We need a good book. This isn’t it.
I actually finished the book the same night that Jeremy Culhane performed his brutal takedown of Tucker Carlson on Saturday Night Live.
Zengerle writes an even-handed and fair portrait of an individual who has sold his soul to gain audience share. John Stewart was both accurate and prescient when he accused Tucker of destroying America over twenty years ago today. Now we stand among the wreckage of what Tucker has wrought, and he is now trying to rally us against the Iran war -brought on by the monster her helped bring into office.
When the history of this period is written, Zengerle's book will be a valuable resource for those seeking to understand how America lost its mind and destroyed itself.
I was lucky to win this book in a Goodreads giveaway contest. I have zero respect for Tucker and Fox “ News “ but I was interested in learning more about him as like most far right extremists, he represents a dangerous threat to our democracy. Fingers crossed that the 2026 mid term elections will be free and fair and that we will not slide into a full blown dictatorship under the MAGA cult of Right Wing and White Nationalists.
I really enjoyed reading this book. I learned a lot about conservatism in the years before I was really paying attention and of course learned more than I ever expected to know about Tucker Carlson. What a fascinating character, but also, in a way, not. There was definitely some ragebait for me here but not as much as I expected. A really smart, detailed, well-written, and I believe fair biography and study of the crazy political and media moment we're in.
There is a fine line between "Trump explainer" and "Trump supporter." You start off by describing the conditions that led to his rise - the erosion of the American dream, the collapse of manufacturing, a professional, elite political class. You find an audience pushing an iconoclastic line. Then you realise you can juice it by not just explaining but supporting. Carlson is not the only journalist to follow this route.
Such a fascinating and well researched look back into one of the biggest grifters in American history. The way Tucker Carlson was so willing to sell his soul for the illusion of being liked by rich and powerful men is just pitiful. It is so deeply sad to have a lifelong loser pulling the strings of conservatives in government.
Wow. As a person who has never seen or read any of Tucker Carlson’s products, this is a fascinating view of a talented, ambitious young man’s rise to power and influence by selling his soul and taking advantage of opportunities wherever they may be found. If you’re a regular viewer of Carlson, you should definitely read this book to understand the level of manipulation you are being fed.
This was interesting. Little fascinating facts throughout and an easy read, but nothing that was groundbreaking and nothing that explored deeper meanings in all of this. Tucker was never great but he is much much worse now and while I think the reader can understand that at least some of that is greed, I don’t know what the author hoped for us to take away.
This was a really interesting look into the evolution of Tucker Carlson as both a person and as a political pundit/influencer. I feel like I understand Carlson better, but I also feel like I understand friends/family who consume his content better, too. I don't think I like him any better (I might like him less?) but it's a more-informed dislike of him now.
Idk why I thought I would like this. Mostly just confirmed what we already know, that TC is an actual journalist turned propagandist. I feel like this book answers the what and the how but not the why. I also think this would be a really salacious book if I knew who half the people were. It was a fine book but it wasn’t meant for me.
It was a great documentation of the history of Tucker Carlson’s shifts in beliefs (if he truly has any) and stated positions. However, I was expecting (or hoping for) more analysis and more of a study on the circular nature of his impact on the right and the right’s impact on him. It was more a history than a thesis.
Starts strong but I left feeling like I didn’t quite fully understand Carlson’s transformation, and how it differed from (or was motivated by) the influence of Trump. Book perhaps suffers in the telling of more recent years (2022 and beyond) of a reluctance of people with access to Carlson to discuss him.
A well-researched look at the beginnings of Cucker Tarlson and his descent into pure madness and utter devotion to Trumpism in order to stay relevant. I might have given this book a 5th star had their been more in-depth discussion of Cucker’s overwhelming desire to say & do whatever it takes to collect as much money as he could…THAT is where the “Conservative Mind” has ‘raveled’.